Viacom says it wants to use the data to prove that copyright-infringing
videos draw higher amounts of traffic than user-generated and fully-legal
content. If Viacom’s hypothesis turns out to be true, it could increase
penalties against YouTube if found liable for contributory copyright
infringement.

The court order to turn over site logs came as part of a sweeping request by
Viacom, where it attempted to acquire source code for the site’s search engine
and copyright video filter – which YouTube wrote as the result of previous litigation
with copyright holders – as well as copies of YouTube parent Google’s
advertisement database schema, and copies of all videos on the site marked
“private.” U.S. District Judge Louis Stanton, who is presiding over the case in
New York, struck
down Viacom’s other requests.

YouTube will, however, also have to produce information on how private videos
are viewed, including information on who watched them and how many times.

Google argued that revealing site logs – 12 terabytes in total and the sole
source of information for video view counts – would constitute a massive breach
of user privacy and place an undue burden on the company, who would need to vet
the data for relevant information. Stanton called these claims “speculative,”
and in denying them noted that site logs could be copied onto a handful of
“over-the-shelf four-terabyte hard drives.” He agreed with Google,
however, in their claims that turning over copies of site’s search engine
source code, the “product of over a thousand person-years of work,” noting that
such an order could do “catastrophic competitive harm” to the company.

CNet notes that Viacom v. Google is about more than a
copyright complaint -- with Google’s frequent invocation of the DMCA’s safe
harbor defense, one of the most lauded, fundamental rules of the
oft-maligned Digital Millennium Copyright Act may be at stake.

“Today’s court order made no finding that Viacom could not be accommodated
by any other means, nor were the YouTube users provided with notice and an
opportunity to contest the claim,” said the EFF. Instead, it writes, Stanton
referred to a Google blog entry, where the company says that it believes IP
addresses cannot identify users, and used Google’s own logic against it.

Viacom originally
launched its lawsuit in 2007, where it alleged that YouTube users viewed
over 160,000 unauthorized clips of Viacom property. The company believes that
YouTube’s business model is “based on building traffic and selling advertising
off of unlicensed content,” and it demanded a court injunction to stop it.

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This article is over a month old, voting and posting comments is disabled

quote: All Google has to do is encrypt and copyright (both perfectly legal) the information before they give it to Viacom and then it will be illegal for Viacom to view it by their own definition.

Alas, the bastards already thought of that. The DMCA has a section saying the DMCA protections don't apply if they need to break copyright encryption as part of an investigation into copyright violation.